Sheriff: Many Maine inmates belong in treatment programs, not jail

Cumberland County Sheriff Kevin Joyce said in a radio interview that people battling mental illnesses or substance abuse problems would be better served in treatment programs than in jail.

In an interview with Maine Public’s Irwin Gratz broadcast Tuesday, Joyce said some research shows it’s less expensive — and more effective — to send people who need it to drug rehabilitation instead of jail when they’ve committed relatively minor crimes.

“The public perception is that we’re doing drug rehabilitation in the jail. The reality is we’re not,” the sheriff told Gratz. “So those folks could better be served by being at a drug rehabilitation program or getting some assistance — with medical assistance, with mental health, or substance use. [There’s a] facade that, you know, we put them behind the walls of the jail and they’re off the street, they’re out of people’s hair, and — oh by the way — we’re fixing them, when we’re not.”